ABSTRACT

Gabriel Tarde was a highly influential figure in 19th century French sociology: a prolific and evocative writer whose understanding of the social differed radically from that of his younger opponent Emile Durkheim. Whereas Durkheimian sociology went on to become the core of the social scientific canon throughout much of the 20th century, Tarde’s sociology fell out of the picture, and he was remembered mostly through a few footnotes in which Durkheim dismissed him as an individualist, a psychologist and a metaphysician.

The social sciences and humanities are now being swept by a Tardean revival, a rediscovery and reappraisal of the work of this truly unique thinker, for whom ‘every thing is a society and every science a sociology’. Tarde is being brought forward as the misrecognised forerunner of a post-Durkheimian era. Reclaimed from a century of near-oblivion, his sociology has been linked to Foucaultian microphysics of power, to Deleuze's philosophy of difference, and most recently to the spectrum of approaches related to Actor Network Theory. In this connection, Bruno Latour hailed Tarde’s sociology as "an alternative beginning for an alternative social science". This volume asks what such an alternative social science might look like.

This second edition has been expanded to include, alongside the original chapters, two key essays by Gabriel Tarde himself - Monadology and Sociology and The Two Elements of Sociology, as well as a significantly revised and extended introduction by the editor.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction to the Second Edition

Revisiting Tarde's house

part I|53 pages

Two essays

part II|102 pages

‘The distance that lay between'

chapter II 4|15 pages

Imitation

Returning to the Tarde–Durkheim debate

chapter II 5|15 pages

The value of a beautiful memory

Imitation as borrowing in serious play at making mortuary sculptures in New Ireland

chapter II 7|8 pages

If there is no such thing as society, is ritual still special?

On using The Elementary Forms after Tarde

chapter II 8|7 pages

One or three

Issues of comparison

chapter II 10|13 pages

Faith, reason and the ethic of craftsmanship

Creating contingently stable worlds

part III|126 pages

Quantifying, tracing, relating

chapter III 11|16 pages

Tarde's idea of quantification 1

chapter III 13|13 pages

Tarde's method

Between statistics and experimentation

chapter III 14|15 pages

Intervening with the social?

Ethnographic practice and Tarde's image of relations between subjects

chapter III 16|16 pages

On Tardean relations

Temporality and ethnography 1

chapter III 17|20 pages

Pass it on

Towards a political economy of propensity

chapter 19|6 pages

Afterword